Digital platforms such as Twitter, Weibo, Amazon, and Google are already important infrastructures in digital society. People rely on these private platforms to complete online work, engage in social interactions, and engage in activities such as transactional entertainment. The capitalist production process has mainly undergone changes in the digital age in the following aspects: Firstly, we have witnessed the emergence and development of a new form of capitalism. As the latest form of capitalism, digital capitalism, compared to industrial capitalism, is characterized by digital technology’s development as a representative example of advanced capitalist productivity, greatly changing the production mode and social and political system of capitalism. The rapid development of digital communication technology is a prerequisite for the formation of digital capitalism and is also an important guarantee enabling digital capitalism to continue to obtain surplus value. The birth and evolution of digital technology has enabled the new capitalism to progress from the traditional industrial production model in a dynamic form. Secondly, with the popularization and alienation of new forms of labor, the updating and iteration of digital technology has greatly expanded the connotations of labor. As a new form of labor, digital labor is an important source of value creation in the digital age. The basic forms of digital labor are divided into material labor, “immaterial labor”, and a mixed form of the two. Thirdly, the manifestation and exploration of new value content. In fact, people already used data resources for productive activities earlier, but the value of data has not been given due attention. Until the era of digital capitalism arrived, data extraction methods were more convenient and diverse, and data was widely used in fields such as production process optimization, consumer preference analysis, and systematic employee management [
1]. The high flow of data can drive market recovery, leading to drastic changes and comprehensive upgrades in the labor market. In capitalist systems, based on digital platforms, powerful data storage and digital algorithms are fully utilized to achieve the effective prediction of production and investment directions and the timely control of capital operation processes. This avoids the oversight and lag caused by the limited carrying of information and unlimited expansion of desires of the market, making resource allocation more reasonable. The production mode is more efficient and better ensures the “thrilling leap” of goods. Fourthly, with the construction and lease of new interactive intermediaries, digital platforms are a new medium for people to interact in the digital age, serving as a centralized location for various digital users such as suppliers, consumers, investors, and advertisers in the cyberspace. They are also the main venues used by digital platform owners to collect and extract data. Nick Srnicek views digital platforms as digital infrastructures that enable interaction between two or more groups, serving as intermediaries that bring different users together. Platforms are divided into five types: advertising platforms, cloud platforms, industrial platforms, product platforms, and lean platforms [
2] (pp. 50–56). As digital platforms become social interaction intermediaries and infrastructure, they also bring a new type of leasing relationship, where digital users and physical enterprises pay rent to digital platforms in different ways. Fifth, with the emergence and monopoly of new types of capital, capital will undergo deformation with the development of production methods and with the times. In the era of digital technology and capitalism, the form of capital has developed to the stage of digital capital. This more pure and refined form of capital, compared to industrial capital, is a new product of the development of digital technology. Digital capital includes not only tangible forms of capital, such as digital infrastructure, stored data, advanced digital technology, and high-tech workers, but also intangible forms of capital, such as the ability to continuously obtain data, innovate technology, cultivate digital talent, and update digital content. At the same time, giant digital platforms are monopolizing the competition in the digital industry market by controlling advanced digital technology and vast amounts of data in order to achieve the goal of maximizing profits. The basic characteristics of monopolistic enterprises in the digital age are their broad platform influence, strong financial reserves, and large user base.